IranSlight Increase in Iran’s Internet Connectivity After 200 Hours...

Slight Increase in Iran’s Internet Connectivity After 200 Hours of Complete Shutdown

-

NetBlocks, an internet monitoring and data analysis website, announced that more than 200 hours after the nationwide and complete internet shutdown in Iran, user connectivity has increased only very slightly. The overall level of access remains at around 2% of normal conditions.
According to NetBlocks, an internet monitoring and data analysis website, user connectivity to the network has increased only marginally after more than 200 hours of a nationwide and complete internet shutdown in Iran.

At the same time, the overall level of access is still reported to be around 2% of normal conditions, and it has been stated that there are no signs of the internet returning to a normal state.
According to experts, the reported increase in access is limited and applies only to a small portion of government infrastructure and specific networks; therefore, general public access to the internet remains largely impossible.
At the start of the third day of the nationwide internet shutdown, NetBlocks had announced that leaders of the Iranian regime continued to publish their own narrative of events online, while the switch they control silences the voices of 90 million Iranians.

Intensifying Repression to Conceal the Scale of The Crime

According to NetBlocks, this digital blackout violates citizens’ fundamental rights and freedoms, and such a nationwide shutdown not only blocks access to information but also conceals the regime’s violence from the eyes of the world and reduces the ability to document events.
The nationwide internet shutdown, along with severe restrictions on telephone communications, including mobile and landline phones, occurred at a time when, according to human rights organizations, thousands of people in various cities were killed by regime forces during the popular protests in Dey.
There is still no precise figure for those killed in the protests in Iran, but the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran has put the number at more than 3,000 people. The internet shutdown has kept the scale of the catastrophe shrouded in ambiguity.
With one-way phone connections from Iran, information is being relayed in a very limited manner to families abroad. Nevertheless, there are also limited methods for making phone calls from outside the country into Iran.
Some figures estimate the number of those killed at 12,000 people, while others assess it to be far higher. However, the lack of independent access to sources inside the country has eliminated the possibility of accurately verifying the number of those killed and detained.

Iran’s regime cut off the internet nationwide starting on January 8, coinciding with the expansion of protests, in an effort to intensify repression. It is said that widespread images of the bodies of those killed and reports from the protests during these days were published only through a small number of users who had access to Starlink.

Human Rights Watch: Growing Evidence of Mass Killings of Protesters in Iran

Challenges facing Starlink during the Iran protests

Despite reports that some users in Iran have gained access to Starlink satellite internet and that it has been offered free of charge to people during the protests, it appears that internet connectivity via Starlink is also facing many difficulties.
According to a report by Reuters, Iran’s regime is now using jammers and fake GPS signals to disrupt Starlink transmissions.
The report adds that the repression of opponents in Iran is becoming one of the toughest security tests to date for Elon Musk’s Starlink.
This is while, according to the news agency, since its deployment during the war in Ukraine, Starlink has functioned as a vital lifeline against government-imposed internet shutdowns.
Reuters notes that SpaceX, the company that owns Starlink, made this satellite service free for Iranians following the nationwide uprising, an action that places Elon Musk’s space company at the center of another geopolitical flashpoint.
The report adds that a team of engineers based in the United States is now confronting regime measures involving satellite jammers and signal spoofing tactics.
Some experts say that agents of the Iranian regime in Tehran and other cities are using scanner equipment to detect Wi-Fi signals in order to identify Starlink sources in urban areas.
Network security specialists recommend that users who are connected to the internet via Starlink pay close attention to necessary security guidelines and adjust settings in a way that minimizes the risk of identification.

Latest news

Message from a Political Prisoner Inside Iran’s Prisons

Imprisoned student Amirhossein Moradi, responding to an offer by the Iranian regime’s judiciary to grant him a pardon, declared...

Record Number of Imprisoned Writers Worldwide. Iran Ranks Second with 53 Jailed Writers

PEN America announced in its latest annual report on the state of freedom of expression worldwide that the number...

IRGC Members Arrested in Kuwait, Woman Sentenced to Life in Prison in Bahrain for Cooperation with IRGC

As the Iranian regime continues its destabilizing activities against countries in the region, Kuwait announced the arrest of four...

Food Inflation and the Erosion of the Middle Class in Iran’s Economy

Iran’s market no longer experiences stability. Prices are rising at a pace that wages cannot even begin to match....

Infighting Intensifies Among the Iranian Regime’s Factions

Infighting among the Iranian regime’s ruling factions has entered a new phase. At a time when economic crisis, social...

120th Week of ‘No to Execution Tuesdays’: Political Prisoners Launch Hunger Strike in 56 Iranian Prisons Amid Escalating Crackdown

On Tuesday, May 12, 2026, political prisoners across 56 prisons in Iran launched a renewed hunger strike, marking the...

Must read

Iran-North Korea Relationship Could Go Nuclear

Iran Focus London, 10 Nov - The growing relationship...

Iran vote blow to world ‘oppressors’: Ahmadinejad

AFP: Iran's incumbent hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you